Thread Closed

how long would it take?

 
Share Thread
May16-09, 02:30 PM   #1
 

how long would it take?


I'm just wondering:

Say you obtain a spaceship that can travel just short of the speed of light.

If you travel to ao object "one light year" away, would it take you one year to get there from YOUR perspective, or from some stationary person on earth's perspective?

Because I know that the closer you get to the speed of light, the slower time passes for you relative to people at rest

So, basically, I'm wondering if, from your perspective, it takes one year to get there or some shorter time
PhysOrg.com science news on PhysOrg.com

>> City-life changes blackbird personalities, study shows
>> Origins of 'The Hoff' crab revealed (w/ Video)
>> Older males make better fathers: Mature male beetles work harder, care less about female infidelity
May16-09, 04:15 PM   #2
 
Mentor
If you travel just short of the speed of light - from the perspective of someone on earth - then to them it takes you about a year to get there. From your perspective, it could be a very short period of time.
May16-09, 04:41 PM   #3
 
Quote by russ_watters View Post
If you travel just short of the speed of light - from the perspective of someone on earth - then to them it takes you about a year to get there. From your perspective, it could be a very short period of time.
really? because i have always wondered that, if it is 50 million light years to the center of our galaxy, then there is really no hope of ever getting too far since thats an excruciatingly long amount of time

so if you were to travel just short of light speed, you could theoretically travel huge distances in what seems like a short amount of time for you? (although your home would be 50 million years older)
May16-09, 04:44 PM   #4
 
Recognitions:
Homework Helper Homework Help

how long would it take?


Quote by csnsc14320 View Post
really? because i have always wondered that, if it is 50 million light years to the center of our galaxy, then there is really no hope of ever getting too far since thats an excruciatingly long amount of time

so if you were to travel just short of light speed, you could theoretically travel huge distances in what seems like a short amount of time for you? (although your home would be 50 million years older)
Yep, that's right
May16-09, 04:51 PM   #5
 
Quote by diazona View Post
Yep, that's right
crazy stuff :p

thanks
May21-09, 04:07 AM   #6
 
Even crazier things happen if you don't return. Say your friends back home are sending you messages. How many years would you see go by in their messages?

Depends on your means of getting close to lightspeed, but say you're accelerating at 1 gee. Then once you've travelled more than a few light-years, the time-difference between when you left and the messages from home you receive on coming to a halt at the Galactic Core, or wherever, is just 1.9 years. That's the difference between light's travel time and yours, regardless of how far you go, if you accelerate constantly the whole way.
May22-09, 11:58 AM   #7
 
think about russ' response above for a moment - from the perspective of someone on earth watching you, it would take you just over a year to get there - BUT from your own perspective, you will have traveled that "one light year" in far less that a year - which brings up the question of "just how far away is that star?" from your perspective, you have either traveled faster than the speed of light, or the star is not "really" 1 LY away.

from earth's perspective, again, it is 1 LY, but from your ship's perspective, it is perhaps only a few million miles (depending on how close to C you are traveling). if you could actually travel at C, people on earth would say it took you exactly one year to arrive, but from your perspective, you would be there instantaneously, since time does not exist at C. so, how far away is that star, really?
May22-09, 01:52 PM   #8
 
Quote by csnsc14320 View Post
really? because i have always wondered that, if it is 50 million light years to the center of our galaxy, then there is really no hope of ever getting too far since thats an excruciatingly long amount of time

so if you were to travel just short of light speed, you could theoretically travel huge distances in what seems like a short amount of time for you? (although your home would be 50 million years older)
FYI, it is "only" about 50,000 light-years to the center of our galaxy, not 50 million. But even that is an excruciatingly long distance / travel time.
May22-09, 03:38 PM   #9
 
Quote by PhysicsDilettante View Post
FYI, it is "only" about 50,000 light-years to the center of our galaxy, not 50 million. But even that is an excruciatingly long distance / travel time.
50,000 ly to the Core and back. The current best estimate puts the Core about ~26,000 ly away. But if one was flying to the very heart of the Virgo Super-Cluster then it'd be about 50 million ly. Would be quite a challenging trip.

Ursula LeGuin's Nearly-as-Fast-as-Light (NAFAL) starships, from her Hainish stories, can do 256 ly in 10.65 hours of subjective time. If acceleration was (near) instantaneous then the time-distortion factor (TDF) would be ~210,000. Constant acceleration would need to be at 25,000 g and a peak TDF of ~2,700,000. For constant acceleration the ratio of cosmic time to subjective time is ln(2*TDF)/(TDF) for high TDF (above about 10.)

BTW what I'm calling TDF is normally referred to as γ <gamma>, and is equal to ~1/√[1 - (v/c)²] so the speed is incredibly close to lightspeed, a gnat's whisker per century difference in speed for that trip to Virgo...
May23-09, 07:41 AM   #10
 
they say that if you could continually accelerate at one g (from your perspective I guess) then you could go virtually anywhere in the universe in one lifetime. I've always found that to be a very surprising result. I think you have to use 'rapidity' to calculate it.
May23-09, 09:05 AM   #11
 
Mentor
Quote by granpa View Post
they say that if you could continually accelerate at one g (from your perspective I guess) then you could go virtually anywhere in the universe in one lifetime. I've always found that to be a very surprising result. I think you have to use 'rapidity' to calculate it.
See

http://www.physicsforums.com/showthr...51#post1193451.
May31-09, 09:36 PM   #12
 
around 2.4 months from your perspective. 1 year to the rest of us.
Thread Closed

Tags
intergalactic travel, rapidity

Similar discussions for: how long would it take?
Thread Forum Replies
Question about the sun and the earth long long ago. General Astronomy 3
How long does it take ? Introductory Physics Homework 6
how long to go from a (D) to an (A) Academic Guidance 9
My first sports session in a long long time (groan) General Discussion 14
How long is Ph.D qualifying exam? How long should I take for preparation? Academic Guidance 2